

Repeatedly, we have seen that the way a child looks (his or her physical characteristics) can affect the way adults respond to that child. In The Bluest Eye, characters associate beauty with whiteness. (127) Parenting is a significant theme in The Bluest Eye and in Imitation of Life, (as well as in the brief clip of the Shirley Temple film, The Littlest Rebel we saw). What are the major themes in The Bluest Eye? Claudia's only desire is to dismember the. Still younger than Pecola and Frieda, She doesn't understand why those around find the baby dolls and Temple so lovable and beautiful.

Claudia, however, hates Shirley Temple in the same way she hates the white baby dolls she receives for Christmas. For Pecola Jane is the perfect little girl that has no problems and that she deeply wishes to be one day. Pecola and Frieda gush over Shirley Temple's beauty. The story of Dick and Jane is cleverly interwoven into the plot and setting of Morrison's novel. She adores Jane, the famous figure from the children's book, who grows up in an entirely different way. Likewise, people ask, who is Jane in The Bluest Eye? In reality, Temples eyes are actually brown. In the novel Pecola Breedlove is an African American girl who has dark skin, and her biggest desire is to have blue eyes. From the article: 'In the story, Pecola drinks out of a cup with Shirley Temple on it since she wanted blue eyes like Shirley Temple and believed drinking from it would turn her eyes blue.

Everything a young girl hoped and dreamed to be. These were the features that made Shirley Temple the idol that everyone admired. The Bluest Eyes Shirley Temple, the little princess.
#SHIRLEY TEMPLE IN THE BLUEST EYE SKIN#
In Morrison's The Bluest Eye, white baby dolls, blue eyes, and actress Shirley Temple symbolize unfair American or Eurocentric standards of feminine beauty - which the novel's female characters respond to in different ways.Īlso Know, does Shirley Temple have blue eyes? Blue eyes, blonde hair and pale skin were the features that were consider beautiful and perfect in the 1930's. Also know, what does Shirley Temple represent in The Bluest Eye?
